Thursday, 25th April 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
News  

South Africa’s Zuma pushes universities to reform on race

South Africa's President Jacob Zuma warned Tuesday there was "much more to be done" to bring racial equality to universities after a series of angry protests over colonial statues and lectures in Afrikaans. The unrest kicked off in March at the University of Cape Town (UCT) when students threw excrement at a statue of British…
President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma

President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma

South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma warned Tuesday there was “much more to be done” to bring racial equality to universities after a series of angry protests over colonial statues and lectures in Afrikaans.

The unrest kicked off in March at the University of Cape Town (UCT) when students threw excrement at a statue of British imperialist Cecil Rhodes, successfully demanding that it was removed from campus.

Now students at Stellenbosch University have been pushing to be taught in English, not Afrikaans — the language of the old apartheid government and which is still dominant at the university.

Several other universities across the country have seen violent demonstrations, over a range of issues including blacks alleging they do not receive a fair proportion of student funding.

“The current activity on many historically white university campuses by new student movements (is) related to concerns around the slow pace of university transformation,” Zuma said after holding talks with university heads in Pretoria.

“We… discussed some of the real gains in transforming the higher education sector, while acknowledging that there is still much more to be done.”

Zuma said Afrikaans should not be used to exclude black students from education.

“It is an African language,” Zuma told reporters. “It must not isolate itself.”

The racial composition of universities — and the language of their instruction — has become a symbol of continuing inequality faced by young black South Africans 20 years after the end of apartheid.

At UCT, which is regularly ranked as the best university in Africa, black students represent just under a quarter of the student body.

Adam Habib, vice chancellor of the University of the Witwatersrand, told reporters that the use of Afrikaans was holding back transformation in the country’s universities.

“You can’t construct a new identity when a language is used as a mechanism and means of exclusion,” he said after the talks with Zuma.

2 Comments

  • Author’s gravatar

    If you don’t like the education, then don’t attend the university. Lowering standards will not improve educational outcome. This is racism against White Afrikaans people and culture. The ANC always values race over results.

  • Author’s gravatar

    How is it racism against Afrikaans. All the government is saying you cannot have only Afrikaans as medium of instruction at Stellenbosch University and exclude all South Africans from a chance to study at the 3 best research university in the country . Afrikaans can continue to be one of the languages of instruction,but not the only. Similarly that historically white universities are pressurized to open up. so the Black universities of Zululand,Univ of Limpopo, Walter Sisulu University of Science and Technology, Mangosutho Univ of Technology , Univerisity of Fort Hare,Central University of Technology must take in more Coloured, White and Indian students as their student bodies are nearly 100 % black African. All South African universities must reform but not at the expense of quality and excellence. The only truelly transformed univerisity is The University of the Western Cape, which all races are there and reflecting more or less the demographics of the Western Cape Province.